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by b112 621 days ago
And yet they still won't care, because most people have zero interest in their job. For those that do? They're lucky, work is fun, and they often love doing the best they can at their job.

So sadly for many only the threat of dismissal forces those unhappy ranks to do their job. Others have a strong work/duty ethic, and will do their best. One thing that can help overall is an entire corporate culture, where everyone is lambasted for such failures.

"You saw that <security guard> wasn't doing his job, and you didn't tell anyone? You're in trouble too!", and so on.

3 comments

> One thing that can help overall is an entire corporate culture, where everyone is lambasted for such failures.

That is precisely what you not want to do, all that breeds is a culture of hyper-paranoid ass-covering and blame deflection.

> because most people have zero interest in their job

So. Much. This.

The number of people who do “just enough” to not get fired is staggering.

There is no “work ethic”.

At least in the military when somebody fucks up during training the entire $GROUP gets punished. It doesn’t take long before people start taking “rules” seriously.

There needs to more consequences and accountability.

The military isn’t some place you send miscreants who always misbehave, most of us wanted to do our best and your description of it is petty insulting and inaccurate. We worked together to attain a goal and fight alongside each other, not because we were beaten trained dogs.
I think the implication was more that there was a lot of social pressure in the military that is absent in megacorp X
For the better, I don't live with my coworkers and I don't want to
Absolutely no disrespect intended at all. Thank you for your service. Perhaps I should have said “basic training” instead of “the military” because that’s the context I was thinking of.
But those engagements would go so much differently and churn would be so much higher if the threat of prison didn’t disallow going AWOL.

It’s a threat of violent coercion, even though daddy never personally hit you or anyone you served with.

It’s how all abusive relationships work, they just operationalized and scaled it to an unprecedented degree.

And then you come out of that abusive relationship with a quick reintegration course and track your duty, but no honor, back to the private sector. If vets weren’t a protected category, they’d be subject to more discrimination due to the warped psyche basic training is designed to produce.

  only the threat of dismissal forces those unhappy ranks to do their job
or, you know, just pay them properly
Pay has nothing to do with it. Nothing.

Here's an example. Your salary is $1M per year, or $10k. In both cases, you hate work, hate your job, don't want to do it, and...

can never be fired.

How does better pay help?

Better pay may help, but only conjoined with the threat of it being taken away if you don't do your job.

And amusingly, you throw out the "better pay" line without even knowing the salary.

I get what you're saying but it is a known fact that most corporate security personnel make not a lot of money. I work in a nice high rise and our front desk security people make $23-$25/hr.

That's probably higher than average.